US8910478B2 - Model-free adaptive control of supercritical circulating fluidized-bed boilers - Google Patents
Model-free adaptive control of supercritical circulating fluidized-bed boilers Download PDFInfo
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
 - F01—MACHINES OR ENGINES IN GENERAL; ENGINE PLANTS IN GENERAL; STEAM ENGINES
 - F01K—STEAM ENGINE PLANTS; STEAM ACCUMULATORS; ENGINE PLANTS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; ENGINES USING SPECIAL WORKING FLUIDS OR CYCLES
 - F01K13/00—General layout or general methods of operation of complete plants
 - F01K13/003—Arrangements for measuring or testing
 
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
 - F22—STEAM GENERATION
 - F22B—METHODS OF STEAM GENERATION; STEAM BOILERS
 - F22B31/00—Modifications of boiler construction, or of tube systems, dependent on installation of combustion apparatus; Arrangements or dispositions of combustion apparatus
 - F22B31/0007—Modifications of boiler construction, or of tube systems, dependent on installation of combustion apparatus; Arrangements or dispositions of combustion apparatus with combustion in a fluidized bed
 
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
 - F22—STEAM GENERATION
 - F22B—METHODS OF STEAM GENERATION; STEAM BOILERS
 - F22B35/00—Control systems for steam boilers
 
 
Definitions
- the subject of this patent relates to automatic control of power plants, and more particularly to a method and apparatus for intelligently controlling Circulating Fluidized-Bed (CFB) Boilers and Once-Through Supercritical Circulating Fluidized-Bed (OTSC CFB) Boilers.
 - CFB Circulating Fluidized-Bed
 - OTSC CFB Once-Through Supercritical Circulating Fluidized-Bed
 - MFA Model-Free Adaptive
 - PID Proportional-Integral-Derivative
 - MFA Model-Free Adaptive
 - Model-Free Adaptive control have been successfully installed in most industries and deployed on a large scale for process control, building control, and equipment control.
 - FIG. 1 is a schematic representation of a Boiler-Turbine-Generator (BTG) unit of a power plant comprising a Supercritical Circulating Fluidized-Bed boiler.
 - BCG Boiler-Turbine-Generator
 - FIG. 2 is a diagram illustrating the key process variables of the Boiler-Turbine-Generator (BTG) unit of a power plant that may comprise a CFB boiler, or a Supercritical CFB boiler.
 - BBG Boiler-Turbine-Generator
 - FIG. 3 illustrates the block diagram of a 3 ⁇ 3 MFA control system for controlling the 3 ⁇ 3 Power-Pressure-Temperature (PPT) process of a Boiler-Turbine-Generator (BTG) unit.
 - PPT Power-Pressure-Temperature
 - BCG Boiler-Turbine-Generator
 - FIG. 4 is a schematic representation of the combustion process of a Supercritical Circulating Fluidized-Bed (CFB) boiler.
 - FIG. 5 is a block diagram illustrating a combined 5 ⁇ 5 CFB combustion process and 3 ⁇ 3 PPT process of a BTG unit according to an embodiment of this invention.
 - FIG. 6 is a block diagram illustrating a 3-input-3-output (3 ⁇ 3) Fuel-Air Ratio Controller according to an embodiment of this invention.
 - FIG. 7 is a block diagram illustrating a multivariable Model-Free Adaptive (MFA) control system for controlling the 5 ⁇ 5 CFB combustion process according to an embodiment of this invention.
 - MFA Model-Free Adaptive
 - FIG. 8 is a block diagram illustrating a 7-input-7-output (7 ⁇ 7) Model-Free Adaptive (MFA) control system for controlling a combined 3 ⁇ 3 PPT process of a BTG unit and 5 ⁇ 5 CFB combustion process according to an embodiment of this invention.
 - MFA Model-Free Adaptive
 - FIG. 9 is a block diagram illustrating a 7-input-7-output (7 ⁇ 7) control system for controlling a combined 3 ⁇ 3 PPT process of a BTG unit and 5 ⁇ 5 CFB combustion process according to an embodiment of this invention.
 - FIG. 10 is a time-amplitude diagram comparing the control performance of a 3 ⁇ 3 MFA control system versus a PID control system for controlling two identical CFB boiler combustion processes comprising Bed Temp, Excess O2, and Furnace Negative Pressure loops, where the setpoint for Bed Temperature is stepped up.
 - FIG. 11 is a time-amplitude diagram comparing the control performance of a 3 ⁇ 3 MFA control system versus a PID control system for controlling two identical CFB boiler combustion processes comprising Bed Temp, Excess O2, and Furnace Negative Pressure loops, where the setpoint for Excess O2 is stepped down.
 - FIG. 12 is a time-amplitude diagram comparing the control performance of a 3 ⁇ 3 MFA control system versus a PID control system for controlling two identical CFB boiler combustion processes comprising Bed Temp, Excess O2, and Furnace Negative Pressure loops, where the setpoint for Negative Pressure is stepped up.
 - FIG. 13 is a time-amplitude diagram comparing the control performance of a 3 ⁇ 3 MFA control system versus a PID control system for controlling two identical CFB boiler combustion processes comprising Bed Temp, Excess O2, and Furnace Negative Pressure loops, where the setpoints for all 3 loops have step changes.
 - FIG. 14 is a time-amplitude diagram presenting the control performance of the 7 ⁇ 7 MFA control system described in FIG. 8 controlling a combined 3 ⁇ 3 PPT process of a BTG unit and 5 ⁇ 5 CFB combustion process including 7 control loops: Power, Steam Pressure, Steam Temperature, Bed Temperature, Excess O2, Furnace Negative Pressure, and Bed Thickness, where the setpoints of Power, Steam Pressure, and Steam Temperature are stepped up.
 - FIG. 15 is a time-amplitude diagram presenting the control performance of the 7 ⁇ 7 MFA control system described in FIG. 8 controlling a combined 3 ⁇ 3 PPT process of a BTG unit and 5 ⁇ 5 CFB combustion process including 7 control loops: Power, Steam Pressure, Steam Temperature, Bed Temperature, Excess O2, Furnace Negative Pressure, and Bed Thickness, where the setpoints of all 7 loops have step changes.
 - nism is used to represent hardware, software, or any combination thereof.
 - process is used to represent a physical system or process with inputs and outputs that have dynamic relationships.
 - OTSC Once-Through Supercritical
 - CFB Circulating Fluidized-Bed
 - OTSC CFB Once-Through Supercritical Circulating Fluidized-Bed
 - Boilers used in energy plants are either “drum” or “once-through” types, depending on how the boiler water is circulated. Heat is transferred through the furnace tubes and into the water passing through the tubes to generate steam.
 - drum-type boilers the steam-flow rate is typically controlled by the fuel-firing rate.
 - once-through boilers the steam-flow rate is established by the boiler feedwater and the superheated steam temperature is controlled by the fuel-firing rate.
 - Circulating Fluidized-Bed (CFB) boilers are becoming strategically important in power and energy generation.
 - the unique design of CFB boilers allows fuel such as coal powders to be fluidized in the air so that they have better contact with the surrounding air for better combustion.
 - CFB boilers can burn low-grade materials such as waste coal, wood, and refuse derived fuel. Most importantly, less emissions such as COx and NOx are produced compared to conventional boilers.
 - the critical process variables and their control challenges for a CFB boiler are listed in Table 3. For a CFB boiler, the control challenges are mainly related to the combustion process of its furnace.
 - OTSC CFB Once-Through Supercritical Circulating Fluidized-Bed (OTSC CFB) Boilers or Supercritical CFB Boilers combine the merits of once-through supercritical and circulating fluidized-bed technologies.
 - OTSC CFB Once-Through Supercritical Circulating Fluidized-Bed
 - Supercritical CFB boilers can significantly improve combustion and energy efficiency, reduce emissions, and have fuel flexibility. It is the most promising boiler for future energy plants because of all its outstanding advantages.
 - a Supercritical CFB boiler based electric power plant also consists of three key components: (1) Boiler, (2) Turbine, and (3) Generator. Similar to conventional boilers, a Supercritical CFB boiler produces superheated steam to turn the turbine to allow the generator to generate electricity. Operating as a set, the combined Boiler, Turbine, Generator, and all auxiliaries make up a BTG unit.
 - FIG. 1 is a schematic representation of a Boiler-Turbine-Generator (BTG) unit of a power plant comprising a Supercritical CFB boiler.
 - Feedwater first enters the Economizer where initial heating to almost boiling occurs. It then passes into the Cyclone Separator at the top of the Boiler. From there the water recirculates through the Superheaters. The superheated steam is fed directly to the Turbine which is coupled with the Generator. Steam is exhausted from the Turbine at a low pressure, condensed, and then pumped back to the boiler under pressure.
 - BSG Boiler-Turbine-Generator
 - a BTG unit may be base-loaded to generate at a constant rate, or may cycle up and down as required by an automatic dispatch system. In either case, the boiler control system manipulates the firing rate of the furnace to generate the steam required to satisfy the demand for power. It is also necessary to maintain an adequate supply of feedwater and the correct mixture of fuel and air for safe and economic combustion. These requirements are actually the same for a conventional BTG unit or a BTG unit that employs an advanced power boiler such as a Supercritical boiler, a CFB boiler, or a Supercritical CFB boiler.
 - FIG. 2 is a diagram illustrating the key process variables of the Boiler-Turbine-Generator (BTG) unit of a power plant that may comprise a CFB boiler, or a Supercritical CFB boiler.
 - BTG Boiler-Turbine-Generator
 - Throttle Valve V T The valve used for the Turbine governor Position control. Firing Rate R F The firing rate of the boiler is changed by manipulating the amounts of air and fuel to the burners. Increasing the firing rate generates more steam. Water Feed F W The feed water flow to the boiler. Power Output J T The power measurement is used to indicate and control the power generation of the BTG unit. Steam Throttle P T The steam throttle pressure is the steam supply Pressure pressure to the turbine. It indicates the state of balance between the supply and demand for steam. Rising throttle pressure indicates that the steam supply exceeds demand and falling throttle pressure indicates that the steam demand exceeds supply. The automatic controller for this purpose is the Turbine Governor. Steam Flow Fs The steam flow. Steam Temp 1 T 1 Temperature of superheated steam in position 1. C. MFA Control of BTG Units
 - the multivariable MFA control system design method has the following key points:
 - a 3 ⁇ 3 MFA control system is designed to control the critical process variables of the BTG unit including Power (J T ), Steam Throttle Pressure (P T ), and Steam Temperature T 1 .
 - the process has 3 inputs and 3 outputs and is called a Power-Pressure-Temperature (PPT) process.
 - the 3 ⁇ 3 PPT process of a BTG unit includes 9 sub-processes G 11 , G 21 , . . . , G 33 as listed in Table 5.
 - variable pairing The importance of the variable pairing is that we want to make sure the 3 main processes G 11 , G 22 , and G 33 have a strong direct or reverse acting relationship so that they have good controllability.
 - FIG. 3 illustrates the block diagram of a 3 ⁇ 3 MFA control system for controlling the 3 ⁇ 3 Power-Pressure-Temperature (PPT) process of a Boiler-Turbine-Generator (BTG) unit.
 - the MFA control system comprises a 3 ⁇ 3 MFA controller 12 , a 3 ⁇ 3 PPT process of a BTG unit 14 , a Firing Rate and Combustion Sub-System 16 , a Throttle Valve and Steam Flow Sub-System 18 , and a Water Flow Sub-System 20 .
 - the 3 ⁇ 3 PPT process has nine sub-processes G 11 through G 33 as listed in Table 5.
 - the process variables y 1 , y 2 , and y 3 are Power (J T ), Steam Throttle Pressure (P T ), and Steam Temperature T 1 , respectively. They are the feedback signals for each of the main control loops and compared with the setpoints r 1 , r 2 , and r 3 at adders 22 to produce error signals e 1 , e 2 , and e 3 .
 - the outputs of the 3 ⁇ 3 MFA controller u 1 , u 2 , and u 3 manipulate the manipulated variables Firing Rate (R F ), Throttle Valve (V T ), and Water Feed (F W ) to control the Power (J T ), Steam Throttle Pressure (P T ), and Steam Temperature T 1 , respectively.
 - FIG. 4 is a schematic representation of the combustion process of a Supercritical Circulating Fluidized-Bed (CFB) boiler.
 - the core element of a CFB boiler is the CFB furnace where combustion is taking place.
 - CFB furnace In a CFB furnace, there are 4 regions based on the vertical distribution of solids, which can be coal or fuel powder. They are the Bottom Region, Dense Region, Dilute Region, and Exit Region.
 - the Bed Thickness can be roughly described as a process variable representing the thickness or the height of the dense region. It can be estimated using the pressure differential in the Dense Region of the CFB furnace.
 - CFB boilers are typically operating in 50:1 ash to coal ratio. That means, during normal operation, only 2% of fresh coal or fuel powder is mixed with 98% coal ash that still has a lot of energy. Since the Dense Region has the highest heat transfer efficiency through direct contact to the furnace wall, it is important to run the CFB furnace at an optimal Bed Thickness.
 - Slag Disposal is the ash leaving the CFB furnace. Because it affects the Bed Thickness directly, we use Slag Disposal as the manipulated variable for controlling the Bed Thickness.
 - the Solids Recycle Feed is another process variable that can affect the Bed Thickness. Since manipulating this variable can only cause a temporary change to the Bed Thickness, it is best to leave it running at a constant rate.
 - FIG. 5 is a block diagram illustrating a combined 5 ⁇ 5 CFB combustion process and 3 ⁇ 3 PPT process of a BTG unit according to an embodiment of this invention.
 - the combined process comprises a 5 ⁇ 5 CFB Combustion Process 23 , a 3 ⁇ 3 PPT Process of BTG Unit 32 , a Throttle Valve and Steam Flow Sub-System 29 , and a Water Flow Sub-System 30 .
 - the Firing Rate a process output from the 5 ⁇ 5 combustion process, is the process input for the 3 ⁇ 3 BTG process. From a control point of view, the Firing Rate loop is an inner-loop for the 3 ⁇ 3 PPT process.
 - the 5 ⁇ 5 CFB combustion process and the 3 ⁇ 3 PPT process of the BTG unit are combined seamlessly to represent the main processes of a CFB boiler or a Supercritical CFB boiler.
 - the 5 ⁇ 5 CFB combustion process 23 includes 25 sub-processes H 11 , H 21 , . . . , H 55 as shown in Table 6.
 - each process output is affected by multiple process inputs going through their corresponding sub-processes.
 - Bed Temp is affected by Primary Air going through sub-process H 11 , Secondary Air going through sub-process H 12 , Exhaust Air going through sub-process H 13 , Slag Disposal going through sub-process H 14 , Coal Feed going through sub-process H 15 , and disturbance d1.
 - the output of each sub-processes H 11 , H 12 , H 13 , H 14 , H 15 , and d1 are summed at adder 24 to produce the Bed Temp signal.
 - variable pairing we want to make sure the 5 main processes H 11 , H 22 , H 33 , H 44 , and H 55 have a strong direct or reverse acting relationship so that they have good controllability.
 - MFA Model-Free Adaptive
 - H 12 F S -T B N Since Secondary Air's entry point is above the Bed Temp measurement point, it has no effect.
 - H 22 F S -O 2 S Strong direct acting. Good fuel and air ratio is required.
 - H 32 F S -P N M to S Secondary Air seriously affects Furnace Negative Pressure.
 - H 42 F S -D B N No major effect of Secondary Air to Bed Thickness.
 - H 52 F S -R F +/ ⁇ M Good fuel and air ratio control can minimize the effect.
 - H 13 F E -T B +/ ⁇ W Exhaust Air has only little effect to Bed Temp.
 - H 23 F E -O 2 +/ ⁇ M Increasing Exhaust Air will temporarily show more Excess O2 but will return to the balanced point.
 - H 33 F E -P N ⁇ S Increasing Exhaust Air causes Furnace Negative Pressure to drop further. Typically, Furnace Negative Pressure needs to be controlled in the range of ⁇ 100 to ⁇ 30 Pa.
 - H 43 F E -D B N No major effect of Exhaust Air to Bed Thickness.
 - H 53 F E -R F ⁇ W Exhaust Air has only a little effect to Firing Rate.
 - H 14 F D -T B ⁇ M Decreasing Disposal Flow will cause Bed Thickness to increase resulting in better heat transfer causing Bed Temp to increase.
 - H 24 F D -O 2 N No major effect of Disposal Flow to O2.
 - H 34 F D -P N N No major effect of Disposal Flow to Furnace Negative Pressure.
 - H 44 F D -D B ⁇ S Decreasing Disposal Flow will increase Bed Thickness, strong reverse acting.
 - H 54 F D -R F ⁇ M Decreasing Disposal Flow will cause Bed Thickness to increase resulting in better heat transfer causing Firing Rate to increase.
 - H 15 F C -T B M to S Coal Feed has medium to strong effect to Bed Temp. That is why it can also be used to control Bed Temp in certain operating conditions when Primary Air reaches its limit.
 - H 25 F C -O 2 ⁇ M to ⁇ S If Coal Feed increases but the air does not increase accordingly, it will cause O2 to drop significantly.
 - H 35 F C -P N ⁇ W Coal Feed has little effect on Furnace Negative Pressure.
 - Combustion is a complex sequence of exothermic chemical reactions with fuel and oxygen producing heat.
 - good combustion control is desirable.
 - Good combustion requires the correct amount of oxygen. Too little air results in CO formation, soot, and even explosion. Too much air will result in excessive NOx emissions and low efficiency due to the heat loss.
 - Optimal combustion control is about finding the optimal fuel-air-ratio dynamically in the sense of most efficient combustion and meeting the emission requirements of COx, NOx and SOx.
 - O2 trim control can be implemented with an O2 control loop.
 - FIG. 6 is a block diagram illustrating a 3-input-3-output (3 ⁇ 3) Fuel-Air Ratio Controller according to an embodiment of this invention.
 - the 3 ⁇ 3 Fuel-Air Ratio Controller 33 comprises a 3 ⁇ 3 MFA Controller or a 3 ⁇ 3 Controller 34 , three signal adders 35 , three calculation blocks 36 , and one scaling block 37 .
 - u f (t) is the fuel flow signal
 - L(.) is a scaling function to scale the fuel flow signal u f (t) to a control signal v f (t) in the range of 0 to 100
 - ⁇ u a1 (t), ⁇ u a2 (t), ⁇ u a3 (t) are controller output incremental signals from the 3 ⁇ 3 MFA controller or the 3 ⁇ 3 controller
 - a 1 , a 2 , a 3 are fuel-air ratio parameters
 - u 1 (t), u 2 (t), u 3 (t) are controller outputs of the 3 ⁇ 3 Fuel-Air Ratio Controller.
 - the fuel-air ratio parameters are related to the fuel type and grade, and can be determined by certain formulas and experimentation.
 - the 3 ⁇ 3 MFA controller that can be used in this embodiment has been described in the U.S. patent application No. 61/473,308.
 - the 3 ⁇ 3 controller that can be used in this embodiment are any of a number of well known automatic controllers that are developed based on the control methods described in the “Instrument Engineers' Handbook—Process Control and Optimization,” edited by Bela Liptak, published by CRC Press in 2005, including PID Control, Model-Based Control, Model-Free Adaptive (MFA) Control, Model Predictive Control, and Nonlinear and Adaptive Control.
 - FIG. 7 is a block diagram illustrating a multivariable Model-Free Adaptive (MFA) control system for controlling the 5 ⁇ 5 CFB combustion process according to an embodiment of this invention.
 - the MFA control system for CFB combustion comprises a 3 ⁇ 3 Fuel-Air Ratio MFA Controller for Air Systems 38 and a SISO MFA Controller 52 to control the Bed Temp, Excess O2, Furnace Negative Pressure, and Bed Thickness of the 5 ⁇ 5 CFB Combustion Process 39 .
 - the 3 ⁇ 3 Fuel-Air Ratio MFA Controller for Air Systems 38 has been described in FIG. 6 .
 - the 3 ⁇ 3 Fuel-Air Ratio MFA Controller for Air Systems 38 is cascaded with 2 SISO MFA controllers 41 and 46 to control the process variables Bed Temp, O2, and Furnace Negative Pressure. Since the Primary Air and Secondary Air processes are nonlinear and need to be well controlled, we use two SISO MFA controllers to control the corresponding air flows.
 - the SISO MFA controller 41 controls the Primary Air process 42 , and adder 44 is used to form the Primary Air feedback loop.
 - the SISO MFA controller 46 controls the Secondary Air process 48 , and adder 50 is used to form the Secondary Air feedback loop.
 - the Exhaust Air does not include an inner loop since it is easy to manipulate.
 - a SISO MFA controller 52 is used to control the Bed Thickness by manipulating the Disposal Flow.
 - Adder 54 is used to form the Bed Thickness feedback loop.
 - the MFA controller can provide prompt and proper control actions to keep Bed Thickness within its operating range when it is approaching its high or low operating limits. If Bed Thickness goes beyond its operating limit, it can result in poor combustion or loss of fluidized-bed due to changes in fuel heating value, fuel powder size, etc.
 - the setpoints (SP) are r 1 , r 2 , . . . , r 4 ;
 - the controller outputs (OP) are u 1 , u 2 , . . . , u 4 ;
 - controlled process variables (PV) are y 1 , y 2 , . . . . , y 4 , respectively.
 - a SISO MFA controller 56 is used to control the Coal Feed flow.
 - Adder 60 is used to form the Coal Feed feedback loop.
 - the SISO MFA controllers that can be used in this embodiment have been described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,055,524 and 6,556,980.
 - the Fuel Flow signal u f (t) connected with the Coal Feed setpoint is a critical input signal for the 3 ⁇ 3 Fuel-Air Ratio MFA Controller 38 since it is the leading signal for fuel-air ratio control.
 - FIG. 8 is a block diagram illustrating a 7-input-7-output (7 ⁇ 7) Model-Free Adaptive (MFA) control system for controlling a combined 3 ⁇ 3 PPT process of a BTG unit and 5 ⁇ 5 CFB combustion process according to an embodiment of this invention.
 - the control system comprises 7 main loops: Power, Steam Pressure, Steam Temp, Bed Temp, Excess O2, Furnace Negative Pressure, and Bed Thickness. It also comprises 5 sub-systems: Primary Air, Secondary Air, Coal Feed, Steam Flow, and Water Flow.
 - the control system comprises a 3 ⁇ 3 Fuel-Air Ratio MFA Controller for Air Systems 61 , a 5 ⁇ 5 CFB Combustion Process 62 , a SISO MFA Controller 65 , a 3 ⁇ 3 MFA Controller for BTG Unit 66 , and a 3 ⁇ 3 PPT Process of BTG Unit 67 .
 - the setpoints (SP) are r 1 , r 2 , . . . , r 7
 - the controller outputs (OP) are u 1 , u 2 , . . . , u 7
 - controlled process variables (PV) are y 1 , y 2 , . . . . , y 7 , respectively.
 - the feedback loops and signal adders are not drawn due to the limited space of the figure.
 - the 3 ⁇ 3 Fuel-Air Ratio MFA Controller for Air Systems 61 has been described in FIG. 6 .
 - the 3 ⁇ 3 MFA control system for controlling the 3 ⁇ 3 Power-Pressure-Temperature (PPT) process of a Boiler-Turbine-Generator (BTG) unit, there are 3 sub-systems including the Firing Rate and Combustion Sub-System 62 , Throttle Valve and Steam Flow Sub-System 69 , and Water Flow Sub-System 70 .
 - Each of the sub-systems may include various control loops.
 - the Water Flow Sub-System typically includes a water flow control loop.
 - control signal u 7 from the 3 ⁇ 3 MFA controller 66 is used as the setpoint for the water flow control loop, which is the inner loop of the cascade control system.
 - MFA controllers or conventional controllers could be used to control these sub-systems.
 - Firing Rate and Combustion Sub-System 62 there are three second layer sub-systems including the Primary Air Sub-System 63 , Secondary Air Sub-System 64 , and Coal Feed Sub-System 68 .
 - SISO MFA controllers can be used in these sub-systems as illustrated and described in FIG. 7 .
 - the 3 ⁇ 3 MFA controller that can be used in this embodiment has been described in the U.S. patent application No. 61/473,308.
 - the control system comprises a 3 ⁇ 3 Fuel-Air Ratio Controller for Air systems 71 , a 5 ⁇ 5 CFB Combustion Process 72 , a SISO Controller 75 , a 3 ⁇ 3 Controller for BTG Unit 76 , and a 3 ⁇ 3 PPT Process of BTG Unit 77 .
 - the setpoints (SP) are r 1 , r 2 , r 7 ;
 - the controller outputs (OP) are u 1 , u 2 , . . . , u 7 ;
 - controlled process variables (PV) are y 1 , y 2 , . . . . , y 7 , respectively.
 - the feedback loops and signal adders are not drawn due to the limited space of the figure.
 - the 3 ⁇ 3 control system for controlling the 3 ⁇ 3 Power-Pressure-Temperature (PPT) process of a Boiler-Turbine-Generator (BTG) unit there are 3 sub-systems including the Firing Rate and Combustion Sub-System 72 , Throttle Valve and Steam Flow Sub-System 79 , and Water Flow Sub-System 80 .
 - Each of the sub-systems may include various control loops.
 - the Water Flow Sub-System typically includes a water flow control loop.
 - control signal u 7 from the 3 ⁇ 3 controller 76 is used as the setpoint for the water flow control loop, which is the inner loop of the cascade control system.
 - Within the Firing Rate and Combustion Sub-System 72 there are three second layer sub-systems including the Primary Air Sub-System 73 , Secondary Air Sub-System 74 , and Coal Feed Sub-System 78 .
 - the SISO controller and 3 ⁇ 3 controllers that can be used in this embodiment are any of a number of well known automatic controllers that are developed based on the control methods described in the “Instrument Engineers' Handbook—Process Control and Optimization,” edited by Bela Liptak, published by CRC Press in 2005, including PID Control, Model-Based Control, Model-Free Adaptive (MFA) Control, Model Predictive Control, and Nonlinear and Adaptive Control.
 - PID Control Model-Based Control
 - MFA Model-Free Adaptive
 - Model Predictive Control Model Predictive Control
 - Nonlinear and Adaptive Control Nonlinear and Adaptive Control.
 - FIG. 10 is a time-amplitude diagram comparing the control performance of a 3 ⁇ 3 MFA control system versus a PID control system for controlling two identical CFB boiler combustion processes comprising Bed Temp, Excess O2, and Furnace Negative Pressure loops, where the setpoint for Bed Temperature is stepped up.
 - the 3 ⁇ 3 Fuel-Air Ratio MFA Controller for Air Systems 38 described in FIG. 7 controls the Bed Temp, Excess O2, and Furnace Negative Pressure loops by manipulating Primary Air, Secondary Air, and Exhaust Air at the same time in a coordinated way.
 - curves 81 , 82 , 83 are SP, PV, OP of the MFA Bed Temperature loop
 - curves 84 , 85 , 86 are SP, PV, OP of the PID Bed Temperature loop
 - Curves 87 , 88 , 89 are SP, PV, OP of the MFA Excess O2 loop
 - curves 90 , 91 , 92 are SP, PV, OP of the PID Excess O2 loop, respectively.
 - Curves 93 , 94 , 95 are SP, PV, OP of the MFA Furnace Negative Pressure loop
 - curves 96 , 97 , 98 are SP, PV, OP of the PID Furnace Negative Pressure loop, respectively.
 - FIG. 11 is a time-amplitude diagram comparing the control performance of a 3 ⁇ 3 MFA control system versus a PID control system for controlling two identical CFB boiler combustion processes comprising Bed Temp, Excess O2, and Furnace Negative Pressure loops, where the setpoint for Excess O2 is stepped down.
 - curves 99 , 100 , 101 are SP, PV, OP of the MFA Bed Temperature loop
 - curves 102 , 103 , 104 are SP, PV, OP of the PID Bed Temperature loop, respectively.
 - Curves 105 , 106 , 107 are SP, PV, OP of the MFA Excess O2 loop, and curves 108 , 109 , 110 are SP, PV, OP of the PID Excess O2 loop, respectively.
 - Curves 111 , 112 , 113 are SP, PV, OP of the MFA Furnace Negative Pressure loop, and curves 114 , 115 , 116 are SP, PV, OP of the PID Furnace Negative Pressure loop, respectively. From the trends, it is seen that the O2 loop is more difficult to control as it is sensitive to the setpoint and operating condition changes.
 - the controller OP (Signals 107 and 110 ) produces the control actions trying to force the O2 PV (Signals 106 and 109 ) to track its setpoint.
 - the MFA O2 loop shows very good performance as its O2 PV (Signal 106 ) tracks its SP change quite nicely.
 - the PID O2 loop oscillates which causes the Furnace Pressure loop to oscillate as well.
 - FIG. 12 is a time-amplitude diagram comparing the control performance of a 3 ⁇ 3 MFA control system versus a PID control system for controlling two identical CFB boiler combustion processes comprising Bed Temp, Excess O2, and Furnace Negative Pressure loops, where the setpoint for Furnace Pressure is stepped up.
 - curves 117 , 118 , 119 are SP, PV, OP of the MFA Bed Temperature loop
 - curves 120 , 121 , 122 are SP, PV, OP of the PID Bed Temperature loop, respectively.
 - Curves 123 , 124 , 125 are SP, PV, OP of the MFA Excess O2 loop, and curves 126 , 127 , 128 are SP, PV, OP of the PID Excess O2 loop, respectively.
 - Curves 129 , 130 , 131 are SP, PV, OP of the MFA Furnace Negative Pressure loop, and curves 132 , 133 , 134 are SP, PV, OP of the PID Furnace Negative Pressure loop, respectively.
 - the 3 ⁇ 3 MFA control system can suppress the disturbances in the Bed Temperature and Excess O2 loops caused by the change in the Exhaust Air (Signal 131 and 134 ), which is the manipulated variable of the Furnace Negative Pressure loop.
 - the same disturbance causes the PID loops especially the O2 loop to swing.
 - FIG. 13 is a time-amplitude diagram comparing the control performance of a 3 ⁇ 3 MFA control system versus a PID control system for controlling two identical CFB boiler combustion processes comprising Bed Temp, Excess O2, and Furnace Negative Pressure loops, where the setpoints for all 3 loops have step changes.
 - curves 135 , 136 , 137 are SP, PV, OP of the MFA Bed Temperature loop
 - curves 138 , 139 , 140 are SP, PV, OP of the PID Bed Temperature loop, respectively.
 - Curves 141 , 142 , 143 are SP, PV, OP of the MFA Excess O2 loop, and curves 144 , 145 , 146 are SP, PV, OP of the PID Excess O2 loop, respectively.
 - Curves 147 , 148 , 149 are SP, PV, OP of the MFA Furnace Negative Pressure loop, and curves 150 , 151 , 152 are SP, PV, OP of the PID Furnace Negative Pressure loop, respectively.
 - the Bed Temperature SP (Signals 135 and 138 ) is firstly stepped up from 45 to 60, the Excess O2 SP (Signals 141 and 144 ) is then stepped down from 60 to 40, and the Furnace Pressure SP (Signals 147 and 150 ) is lastly stepped up from 3 to 6.
 - each setpoint change causes disturbances to all control loops.
 - the 3 ⁇ 3 MFA air control system is able to deal with the disturbances and keeps the Bed Temp, Excess O2, and Furnace Negative Pressure under control.
 - the PID control system cannot effectively control the 3 ⁇ 3 process resulting in oscillations in all 3 loops.
 - control trends demonstrate outstanding control performance of the 3 ⁇ 3 Fuel-Air Ratio MFA Controller for Air Systems for both tracking and regulating capabilities.
 - the compensators inside the 3 ⁇ 3 MFA controller can effectively decouple and reduce the interactions from the other loops of the multivariable combustion process.
 - the control trends also demonstrate unsatisfactory control performance of the PID control system. Since PID controllers are single-loop controllers and can only treat the 3-Input-3-Output (3 ⁇ 3) multivariable process as three single-input-single-output (SISO) processes, it is very difficult for the PID control system to be effective and achieve good control performance. When there is a setpoint change or disturbance in the process, it will take a long time for the loops to settle down due to interactions among the loops.
 - FIG. 14 is a time-amplitude diagram presenting the control performance of the 7 ⁇ 7 MFA control system described in FIG. 8 controlling a combined 3 ⁇ 3 PPT process of a BTG unit and 5 ⁇ 5 CFB combustion process including 7 control loops: Power, Steam Pressure, Steam Temperature, Bed Temperature, Excess O2, Furnace Negative Pressure, and Bed Thickness, where the setpoints of Power, Steam Pressure, and Steam Temperature are stepped up.
 - curves 153 , 154 , 155 are SP, PV, OP of the Power loop
 - curves 156 , 157 , 158 are SP, PV, OP of the Steam Pressure loop
 - curves 159 , 160 , 161 are SP, PV, OP of the Steam Temperature loop
 - curves 162 , 163 , 164 are SP, PV, OP of the Bed Temperature loop
 - curves 165 , 166 , 167 are SP, PV, OP of the Excess O2 loop
 - curves 168 , 169 , 170 are SP, PV, OP of the Furnace Negative Pressure loop
 - curves 171 , 172 , 173 are SP, PV, OP of the Bed Thickness loop.
 - FIG. 15 is a time-amplitude diagram presenting the control performance of the 7 ⁇ 7 MFA control system described in FIG. 8 controlling a combined 3 ⁇ 3 PPT process of a BTG unit and 5 ⁇ 5 CFB combustion process including 7 control loops: Power, Steam Pressure, Steam Temperature, Bed Temperature, Excess O2, Furnace Negative Pressure, and Bed Thickness, where the setpoints of all 7 loops have step changes.
 - curves 174 , 175 , 176 are SP, PV, OP of the Power loop, curves 177 , 178 , 179 are SP, PV, OP of the Steam Pressure loop, curves 180 , 181 , 182 are SP, PV, OP of the Steam Temperature loop, curves 183 , 184 , 185 are SP, PV, OP of the Bed Temperature loop, curves 186 , 187 , 188 are SP, PV, OP of the Excess O2 loop, curves 189 , 190 , 191 are SP, PV, OP of the Furnace Pressure loop, and curves 192 , 193 , 194 are SP, PV, OP of the Bed Thickness loop.
 - “jerky” controller outputs are shown when setpoints of several process variables change at the same time. This means the process variables have strong interactions among them and require the controllers to make prompt and “smart” actions to compensate for the interactions and disturbances.
 
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
 - Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
 - Combustion & Propulsion (AREA)
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 - Thermal Sciences (AREA)
 - Fluidized-Bed Combustion And Resonant Combustion (AREA)
 
Abstract
Description
| TABLE 1 | |
| U.S. Pat. No. | Patent Name | 
| 6,055,524 | Model-Free Adaptive Process Control | 
| 6,556,980 | Model-Free Adaptive Control for Industrial Processes | 
| 6,360,131 | Model-Free Adaptive Control for Flexible Production | 
| Systems | |
| 6,684,115 | Model-Free Adaptive Control of Quality Variables (1) | 
| 6,684,112 | Robust Model-Free Adaptive Control | 
| 7,016,743 | Model-Free Adaptive Control of Quality Variables (2) | 
| 7,142,626 | Apparatus and Method of Controlling | 
| Multi-Input-Single-Output Systems | |
| 7,152,052 | Apparatus and Method of Controlling | 
| Single-Input-Multi-Output Systems | |
| 7,415,446 | Model-Free Adaptive Optimization | 
| TABLE 2 | |
| Challenges | Description and Comments | 
| Severely | The relationship of throttle valve, fuel feed, and water feed | 
| Nonlinear | to power, steam pressure, and steam temperature are | 
| and | nonlinear and interacting. | 
| Multi- | |
| variable | |
| Serious | Because of the once-through design, there exists serious | 
| Coupling | coupling between the boiler and turbine units. | 
| Large | Since there is no steam drum, any changes in the throttle | 
| Disturbances | valve position will cause a direct disturbance to the boiler | 
| pressure and temperature. | |
| Large load | Boiler needs to run in both subcritical and supercritical | 
| and | modes causing large load and operating condition changes. | 
| operating | |
| condition | |
| changes | |
| TABLE 3 | |
| Process Variable | Control Challenges of CFB Boilers | 
| Master Steam | Nonlinear, tight specifications, large delay time, | 
| Pressure | large disturbance caused by load changes and | 
| poor feed actuation, etc. | |
| Steam Temperature | Large time delay and time-varying. | 
| Bed Temperature | Multi-input-single-output process, multiple | 
| constraints, very critical since poor bed temp control | |
| results in serious NOx emissions. | |
| Excess Oxygen | It is related to multiple emission constraints, varying | 
| heating value of flexible fuel, and the condition of | |
| oxygen sensors. | |
| Furnace Negative | Multiple fans and dampers to hold proper negative | 
| Pressure | pressure for the furnace. | 
| Coal or Fuel Feed | Nonlinear, poor actuation, coal or fuel feed jams, | 
| etc. | |
| Primary Air and | Multiple fans and dampers to hold the proper CFB | 
| Secondary Air | circulating condition and fuel-air-ratio. Extremely | 
| sensitive to bed temperature. | |
| Bed Thickness | For highest heat transfer efficiency, it is important | 
| to run the CFB furnace at an optimal Bed Thickness. | |
B. Supercritical CFB Boilers and BTG Units
| TABLE 4 | ||
| Variable | Symbol | Description | 
| Throttle Valve | VT | The valve used for the Turbine governor | 
| Position | control. | |
| Firing Rate | RF | The firing rate of the boiler is changed by | 
| manipulating the amounts of air and fuel to the | ||
| burners. Increasing the firing rate generates | ||
| more steam. | ||
| Water Feed | FW | The feed water flow to the boiler. | 
| Power Output | JT | The power measurement is used to indicate and | 
| control the power generation of the BTG unit. | ||
| Steam Throttle | PT | The steam throttle pressure is the steam supply | 
| Pressure | pressure to the turbine. It indicates the state of | |
| balance between the supply and demand for | ||
| steam. Rising throttle pressure indicates that | ||
| the steam supply exceeds demand and | ||
| falling throttle pressure indicates that the | ||
| steam demand exceeds supply. The automatic | ||
| controller for this purpose is the Turbine | ||
| Governor. | ||
| Steam Flow | Fs | The steam flow. | 
| Steam Temp 1 | T1 | Temperature of superheated steam in | 
|   |  ||
C. MFA Control of BTG Units
- 1. The control system design is based on qualitative analysis of the process input and output variables. No detailed quantitative analysis or process models are required.
 - 2. For a multivariable process, use S (Strong), M (Medium), and W (Weak) to represent the degree of connections between the input and output of each sub-process. Use the plus or minus sign to represent whether the process is direct or reverse acting.
 - 3. Properly pair the process input and output variables so that the main processes are open-loop stable and have a strong direct or reverse acting relationship to assure good controllability.
 - 4. The remaining sub-processes should have medium, weak, or even no connections between their input and output variables. Their acting types do not matter.
 - 5. If a sub-process has a strong relationship between its input and output, either improve the process or carefully launch the control system.
 
| TABLE 5 | |
| Process Outputs - Process | |
| Variables to be Controlled | |
| Process Inputs - | Steam Throttle | ||
| Manipulated Variables | Power (JT) | Pressure (PT) | Steam Temp (T1) | 
| Firing Rate (RF) | G11 | G21 | G31 | 
| Throttle Valve (VT) | G12 | G22 | G32 | 
| Water Feed (FW) | G13 | G23 | G33 | 
| TABLE 6 | |
| Process Outputs - Process | |
| Variables to be Controlled | |
| Process Inputs - | Bed | Excess | Negative | Bed | |
| Manipulated | Temp | O2 | Pressure | Thickness | Firing Rate | 
| Variables | (TB) | (O2) | (PN) | (DB) | (RF) | 
| Primary Air | H11 | H21 | H31 | H41 | H51 | 
| (FP) | |||||
| Secondary Air | H12 | H22 | H32 | H42 | H52 | 
| (FS) | |||||
| Exhaust Air | H13 | H23 | H33 | H43 | H53 | 
| (FE) | |||||
| Slag Disposal | H14 | H24 | H34 | H44 | H54 | 
| (FD) | |||||
| Coal Feed | H15 | H25 | H35 | H45 | H55 | 
| (FC) | |||||
| TABLE 7 | |||
| Input- | Acting | ||
| Process | Output | Type | Qualitative Input and Output Relationship | 
| H11 | Fp-TB | −S | Strong reverse acting. Primary Air has upper and lower | 
| constraints when used to control Bed Temp since it also | |||
| needs to hold the proper fluidized bed condition. | |||
| H21 | Fp-O2 | M | Increasing Primary Air will cause O2 to increase. | 
| H31 | Fp-PN | M to S | Primary Air seriously affects Furnace Negative | 
| Pressure. | |||
| H41 | Fp-DB | N | No major effect of Primary Air to Bed Thickness. | 
| H51 | Fp-RF | −M | Increasing Primary Air will cause Bed Temp to | 
| decrease and Exhaust Air Temp to increase causing a | |||
| lower Firing Rate. | |||
| H12 | FS-TB | N | Since Secondary Air's entry point is above the Bed | 
| Temp measurement point, it has no effect. | |||
| H22 | FS-O2 | S | Strong direct acting. Good fuel and air ratio is required. | 
| H32 | FS-PN | M to S | Secondary Air seriously affects Furnace Negative | 
| Pressure. | |||
| H42 | FS-DB | N | No major effect of Secondary Air to Bed Thickness. | 
| H52 | FS-RF | +/−M | Good fuel and air ratio control can minimize the effect. | 
| H13 | FE-TB | +/−W | Exhaust Air has only little effect to Bed Temp. | 
| H23 | FE-O2 | +/−M | Increasing Exhaust Air will temporarily show more | 
| Excess O2 but will return to the balanced point. | |||
| H33 | FE-PN | −S | Increasing Exhaust Air causes Furnace Negative | 
| Pressure to drop further. Typically, Furnace Negative | |||
| Pressure needs to be controlled in the range of −100 to | |||
| −30 Pa. | |||
| H43 | FE-DB | N | No major effect of Exhaust Air to Bed Thickness. | 
| H53 | FE-RF | −W | Exhaust Air has only a little effect to Firing Rate. | 
| H14 | FD-TB | −M | Decreasing Disposal Flow will cause Bed Thickness to | 
| increase resulting in better heat transfer causing Bed | |||
| Temp to increase. | |||
| H24 | FD-O2 | N | No major effect of Disposal Flow to O2. | 
| H34 | FD-PN | N | No major effect of Disposal Flow to Furnace Negative | 
| Pressure. | |||
| H44 | FD-DB | −S | Decreasing Disposal Flow will increase Bed Thickness, | 
| strong reverse acting. | |||
| H54 | FD-RF | −M | Decreasing Disposal Flow will cause Bed Thickness to | 
| increase resulting in better heat transfer causing Firing | |||
| Rate to increase. | |||
| H15 | FC-TB | M to S | Coal Feed has medium to strong effect to Bed Temp. | 
| That is why it can also be used to control Bed Temp in | |||
| certain operating conditions when Primary Air reaches | |||
| its limit. | |||
| H25 | FC-O2 | −M to −S | If Coal Feed increases but the air does not increase | 
| accordingly, it will cause O2 to drop significantly. | |||
| H35 | FC-PN | −W | Coal Feed has little effect on Furnace Negative | 
| Pressure. | |||
| H45 | FC-DB | N | Coal Feed is only 2% of the total circulating material | 
| for a 50:1 circulating ratio CFB furnace. Thus, no major | |||
| effect of coal feed change to Bed Thickness. | |||
| H55 | FC-RF | S | Strong direct acting. Since coal needs time to burn and | 
| generate energy, there is an inevitable delay time, which | |||
| makes this loop more difficult to control. | |||
E. Optimal CFB Combustion Control
v f(t)=L[u f(t)], (1)
u 1(t)=a 1 v f(t)+Δu a1(t), (2a)
u 2(t)=a 2 v f(t)+Δu a2(t), (2b)
u 3(t)=a 3 v f(t)+Δu a3(t). (2c)
Claims (16)
v f(t)=L[u f(t)],
u 1(t)=a 1 v f(t)+Δu a1(t),
u 2(t)=a 2 v f(t)+Δu a2(t),
u 3(t)=a 3 v f(t)+Δu a3(t),
v f(t)=L[u f(t)],
u 1(t)=a 1 v f(t)+Δu a1(t),
u 2(t)=a 2 v f(t)+Δu a2(t),
u 3(t)=a 3 v f(t)+Δu a3(t),
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| US10228132B2 (en) | 2014-02-03 | 2019-03-12 | Brad Radl | System for optimizing air balance and excess air for a combustion process | 
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